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The endless variety in residential floorplans, of which the bathroom is only one small part; infinite seems too little a quantity, to cover the possible
solutions available to the designer.

Several different drawing styles are demonstrated here; only three of the examples appear to be from construction documents, while the others are
from publication plans. In four instances of the latter passage doors are omitted, leaving the reader in doubt as to which openings might have them.
(I'm particularly tickled by the compact bath arrangement seen in Whitney Smith's Case Study #5.)

In Jones's expansive Smalley residence the architect's debt to Wright can be seen in the windows of the first bathroom. And why does one of a pair of
toilet compartments in the second Smalley bath have a skylight---and not the other ?

FLlW engaged in this sort of Ã¢â‚¬Å“playÃ¢â‚¬Â� as well in his late 1950Ã¢â‚¬â„¢s bedroom wing addition to the Davis house in Marion, IN. The addition provided a sense of separation or autonomy for the older Davis children from the younger children in the bedrooms in the original wing with the parents. The two additional bedrooms each had an adjoining sink and toilet room, but shared a hexagonal glass and tile sunken shower stall. The shower had a door from each toilet room.